Albert Fall
No. This is a multiple-choice distractor. The Teapot Dome (1922-1923) was a scandal in the administration of President Warren G. Harding, wherein his Secretary of the Interior, Albert B. Fall, was bribed to sell oil leases on government land.
Congress approves Secretary of State.
James G. Blaine, from Maine, was Garfield's choice for Secretary of State.
The People's Choice from Washington to Harding was created in 1933.
The speaker of the house becomes president if the president and VP both die at the same time. If only the president dies, the VP becomes president. If only the VP dies, the president nominates a new VP who must be approved by the both houses of Congress in order to take office.
Congress does not have to give approval to appoint the President's choice for Secretary of State. However, a confirmation hearing takes place before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Just write to him. Or contact his personal secretary. Or when the President is on LIVE TV show, put your questions by telephone. Your choice. Pick one of them.
Not sure but i heard AE (Allen Edmonds) Park Avenues, an excellent choice.
I think Secretary of State Rice lives at the Watergate Building. I found your question on WikiAnswers because I am trying to find out if that is by choice or is that the official residence like the President and Vice President have? Judy
It's customary when a single name of a historical figure is given for it to be the last name... though there are some exceptions, like monarchs, who may not technically have a last name.With that in mind: Earl Warren was never president, he was Chief Justice from 1953-1969 ... there was actually quite a lot that happened in that span, a couple of the more well known cases from the Warren court era being Brown v. Board of Education and Miranda v. Arizona ("Miranda warning" is named after this case specifically).If you mean Warren Harding, then he was president from March 1921 to August 1923 (he died in the middle of his term as president). What he's mostly remembered for today is the Teapot Dome scandal, which to be perfectly fair the consensus is that Harding himself was not personally and directly involved in beyond making a poor choice for his Secretary of the Interior.
After the dismissal of Simon Cameron who proved of being incompetent, Edwin M. Stanton become Secretary of War under President Lincoln's Administration.
Charges of a corrupt bargain between Adams and Clay